Skip advert
Advertisement

Citroen e-C4 Sense Plus: Living with it

We put Citroen's electric family hatchback through its paces in the real world with a long-term test

On fleet since:May 2021
List price new:£30,895 after plug-in car grant
Options:Premium metallic paint (£700)
Mileage to date: 900
Efficiency to date:3.1 miles/kWh
Problems?None so far

Report 1: Introducing our Citroen e-C4

While every mainstream car manufacturer is fully committed to the electric transition, different brands are going about it in different ways. While some focus on standalone electric models and new sub-brands, those in the Stellantis Group, which includes Citroen, are offering the same models with a choice of petrol, diesel, hybrid or electric power.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The C4 is a typical example of this – although it's notable that Citroen isn't offering it as a plug-in hybrid, as it believes current charging speeds and ranges are now sufficient for buyers of cars this size not to need the 'stepping stone' of a plug-in hybrid.

For the latest McIlroy family runabout, we've chosen the fully electric version, which Citroen dubs the e-C4. We reckon the vast majority of trips it'll undertake in this role will be well within the comfort zone of its claimed 217-mile range.

We went for the entry-level Sense Plus trim level, with the addition of eye-catching Elixir Red metallic paint for £700 as an optional extra. Picking the most basic version hasn't left us feeling hard done by when it comes to standard kit, though; LED lights, dual-zone climate control along, a 10-inch touchscreen infotainment system, a digital instrument panel and a head-up display are all standard. That comes to just under £31,000 bought outright, or around the £400 per month mark on a PCP finance deal.

Over the next six months, we'll be evaluating how the e-C4 performs both as an electric car and as practical family transport. So far, it has done everything right. We've been using it for all our routine short journeys, covering school runs, shopping trips and so on. We've been charging it every three or four days, at which point the battery is about half depleted.

Initial observations are of a comfortable ride around town on the car's hydraulic suspension, as well as plenty of space in the back and in the 380-litre boot for our son and his kit. On longer trips, it's evident that the predicted range drops quite rapidly at motorway speed, but we haven't felt true range anxiety at any point so far.

Skip advert
Advertisement

John McIlroy is an experienced motoring journalist who has previously edited Autosport and WhatCar?. He's now the deputy editor of DrivingElectric's sister titles Auto Express and Carbuyer.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Next-generation BMW M3 will be getting a fully-electric powertrain
BMW M3 render
News

Next-generation BMW M3 will be getting a fully-electric powertrain

The new BMW M3 is due in 2028 and will be offered as an EV alongside a mild-hybrid petrol version
19 Dec 2024
EV Deal of the Day: smart-looking Nissan Ariya EV for £209 a month
Nissan Ariya
News

EV Deal of the Day: smart-looking Nissan Ariya EV for £209 a month

The Nissan Ariya is an impressive, all-electric family SUV with a surprisingly posh interior
18 Dec 2024
MINI Aceman review
MINI Aceman - front tracking
In-depth reviews

MINI Aceman review

MINI’s all-electric small SUV is just as fun as the brand’s staple hatch, with an added layer of practicality
10 Dec 2024